So. What do you do for a living?

My title is Commercial Property Manager, from lease analyses and negotiations to roof inspections, but really that’s only about 20% of the job. I also dabble in the company’s corporate entities/trusts/contracts/preparing for legal cases/IT/filing/managing contractors and maintenance staff/accounting/marketing/notarizing/HR/company calendar/office supplies … really, if anything has to be done, somebody will probably ask me to do it. Sometimes I help out with my bosses’ kids/pets/travel arrangements/homes. I love it all. It keeps me busy and interested. I’m happy with my salary, and the company pays for my health care. There are seven of us here, and I have my own office with a door, a desktop and two monitors. I can usually get away with paying my own bills, making appointments, and dealing with other personal matters while I’m at work. I spend my days in a pretty little town 22 minutes from my house.

I’m 15-20 years away from possibly retiring, and more than that if I can swing it. My boss is older than I am, but I think the company will survive him, and there will always be something to do here.

I’ll echo what someone else said: This crowd really does have an impressive breadth of expertise.

Lots of computer folks, and so far I think I’m the only pharma guy.

I started in a lab, did a stint as a Validation Engineer, then I ran a small production facility. After that I spent a long time overseeing new drug development programs. That was my favorite, and I miss it. My last and current jobs were being a generic executive and would really like to get back to development. It would be a pay cut, however, so sometimes I think that at 51 I should just bank and GTFO.

Critical care RN. 31 years of surgical/trauma/transplant ICU, now the last 5 years in post-anesthesia recovery.

You – or someone like you – danced with me in the hospital hallway after my bariatric surgery 3 years ago, when I had a hard time shaking off the anesthesia. Thank you!

What a fascinating group of experiences!

I’m much more boring than some - accountant at an O&G company.

I see liontaming as your next logical progression.

Whoa - you happened to pick no. 3 on my Alltime Greatest Film list.
The only thing on the inside of my right trailer door is an 8" x 11" glossy from BT. (Chauncey in his garden) :slightly_smiling_face:

Just another Gentleman of Leisure (in other words, just a fancy way of saying RDOS).

Before that I went from short-order cook to substitute teacher to Transportation (personal property) specialist for the Dept. of Defense (US Army), then Type Classification specialist (don’t ask, I worked it for a year and never figured it out), before finally landing by luck and happenstance in the job I held for nearly 25 years.

International Arms Merchant.

Actually, I worked as a Country Case Manager for Foreign Military Sales. When foreign countries wanted to buy some of our systems (because the USA makes things that go BOOM better than most folks), I wrote up the agreement, explained it to the customer, monitored it once signed so that everything got on contract and was within the cost shown, and briefed the customer on progress when they asked (usually 1-2 times a year). It got me to 4 continents and to seeing places and sites I never thought I would get to see, and I think I did a pretty good job at it.

I did a postdoc at a pharmaceutical company. Loved it, but they weren’t hiring at that time so I ended up elsewhere. I have very fond memories of it though.

And “O&G” means what?

i was guessing Oil & Gas myself.

Oh sorry - oil & gas

edit - ninja’d by Maserschmidt

Thanks both of you.

Easy to forget which TLAs are universal and which are industry-specific :slight_smile:

I sure do.

I am a Program Manager, working in the television tech industry for the last 25 years, managing and implementing the development of things like cable/satellite infrastructure (set-tops, VOD systems, etc.) for major providers and suppliers like Verizon and Cisco. I’m currently working on building production tools (cameras, encoders, etc.) for creating Immersive Content for the Vision Pro.

I was an English/hacky-sack major in school, and after the videotex partnership where started my career was shuttered, I worked as a Producer for a TV show, and then spent 5 years doing cable regulatory affairs (franchising, etc.) before moving over to the tech side to run the Y2K program. Being here at Apple was not really foreseeable back then.

I’m a farmer.

Certified organic fresh produce, primarily direct-market, to be precise.

Related to that I’m the primary manager for a farmers’ market.

Only tangentially related to that I sit on a town planning board.

None of that pays very much and some of it doesn’t pay anything; but it all needs doing and most of the time I like doing it.

Before all of that I worked in vineyards, so also farming; and briefly as a migrant fruit picker, also farming. Before and sometimes during that I worked, very briefly at each, at: waiting on tables (which I am bad at); beveling crystals that went into radios, which was an awful job which I’m pretty sure no longer exists; and in a medical records room, a job which is now I presume done drastically differently than it was at the time.

What’s a “TLA”?

Holy gawds. Remind me to 1a.) give much respect, and 2b.) NEVER piss you off.

A three-letter acronym for Three Letter Acronym. :wink:

I’d like to echo the praise for the diverse experience here, but also perhaps lament the number of retired people. There’s nothing wrong with retired people of course but it underlines the fact that the SDMB is a dying message board.

A question for the retired people. Do you normally identify yourself with the job you used to do, or have you found a new identity in retirement, or did you never identify yourself by occupation? This thread obviously leads you to identify as a “retired such and such” but how do you think of yourselves normally? What is your answer to the question “who are you?”

For myself, I’m an active airline pilot with about 14 years of flying left, medical permitting. I have also worked as a service station attendant, a post/freight sorter, and I had a stint playing Red Light, Green Light, with trains.

Oh, for cryin’ out loud.

I started off working in sales / project management in translation, then got into importing first dealing with international supplier then sales and marking of imported products.

Later, I took a complete turn and went into teaching and have taught English for 13 years.

I’m a librarian at a very large public university in the southeast US. But mostly I manage other librarians and projects at this point in my career.